Has increasing patient self-management changed trust relations with health professionals? This book provides a detailed theoretical, empirical and policy analysis of the nature, salience and impact of trust on relations between patients, clinicians, and health service managers.
This book tells us how to do it. Read it!"--Leland Kaiser, founder, Kaiser & Associates "This book encourages us to recenter our work on core values and the patients and communities we serve.
This unique book explores the importance of trust, how it is lost and won and the extent to which trust relationships in health care may have changed.
Benjamin Ho reveals the surprising importance of trust to how we understand our day-to-day economic lives.
This is a comprehensive survey of the causes and consequences of declining trust in healthcare, and provides suggestions for its restoration.
"Provocative, smoothly written, and supported by appropriate data, this is a first-rate book by a first-rate scholar. The message is timely and the thesis unique and believable.
Rawlsian philosophical theory offers a view about how to do it and is interesting to consider in a healthcare context. In the 1970s, philosopher John Rawls attempted to deal with difficult questions around distributive justice.
This book offers a popular, gripping account of the most vital political issue of the 21st century.
Different facetsoftrust may have different thresholds depending on the level of reliance ina particular areaand the consequences ofone's expectations' being disappointed (Shaw,1997). For example, ifyou areaware thatafriend is lessthan ...
Trust, says Stephen M. R. Covey, is the very basis of the 21st century's global economy, but its power is generally overlooked and misunderstood.
Perspectives from organizational theory, social psychology, sociology and economics are brought together in this volume to provide a broad coverage of trust, including the psychological and social antecedents of trust.